Are You An Engilsh Teacher? so use these steps to teach any activity in the book


Teaching the activites in the Student’s Book

SNAPSHOT

The Snapshot activities are designed to introduce the topic of the unit .
Snapshots contain interesting information from the real world, presented in an easy-to-read graphic form. Follow-up questions in the Snapshot enable students to personalize

the topic.
: There are three general teaching steps for Snapshot

Step 1. Books closed. Introduce the new topic

Step 2. Books open. Lead the students through the information in the Snapshot

Step 3. Do the follow-up questions as a class or in groups




WORD POWER

The Word Power activities present vocabulary related to the topic of a unit. The vocabulary is then developed through a variety of interesting tasks, such as word maps, charts, collocation exercises, and matching exercises.

: There are five general teaching steps for Word Power

Step 1. Introduce the new topic and elicit associated vocabulary

Step 2. Model the pronunciation of new words

Step 3. Explain and model the task

Step 4. Students complete the task

Step 5. Check answers with the class





CONVERSATION



The Conversation activities are designed to introduce new grammar in a context. These short, fun dialogs are accompanied by a colorful picture that sets the scene. There are two Conversation exercises in a typical unit. Conversation is usually followed by Grammar Focus

: There are five general teaching steps for Conversation

Step 1. Set the scene. Set a focus question

Step 2. Books closed. Students listen once or twice to the audio program

Step 3. Check students’ comprehension

Step 4. Books open. Students read silently as they listen once more

Step 5. Students practice the Conversation


GRAMMAR


Grammar Focus activities formally present the new structure that was introduced in Conversation. First, a summary of the new structure is presented, followed by controlled practice. Finally, there is some freer practice of the grammar. In the freer activities, students have the chance to personalize the grammar, using their own information.

: There are five general teaching steps for Grammar Focus

Step 1. Elicit or explain the rules

Step 2. Present example sentences

Step 3. Model the task

Step 4. Students complete the task

Step 5. Check answers with the class

PRONUNCIATION



The Pronunciation activities focus on important features of language such as stress, reductions, and intonation. The Pronunciation exercises are almost always connected to the Conversation and Grammar Focus activities.
: There are four general teaching steps for Pronunciation

Step 1. Books closed. Introduce the pronunciation feature using the audio program

Step 2. Highlight the pronunciation feature
.
Step 3. Model the pronunciation

Step 4. Check individual responses

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FLUENCY ACTIVITIES

The pair-work, group-work, and role-play activities provide the students with more personalized and meaningful practice of the new structures, functions, and topics.

: There are five general teaching steps for Fluency Activities

Step 1. Set the scene and review the model

Step 2. Explain and model the task

Step 3. Divide the class into pairs or groups

Step 4. Students complete the task

Step 5. Give students feedback



LISTENING



The Listening activities in New Interchange are designed to develop a wide variety of sub-skills, including listening for gist and listening for detail. Charts, photos, illustrations, and other visual aids help students focus on extracting the main ideas or information.

There are five general teaching steps for Listening:

Step 1. Set the scene

Step 2. Books closed. Set a focus question and play the audio once

Step 3. Books open. Explain the task

Step 4. Play the audio program once or twice more as students complete the task

Step 5. Check answers with the class



INTERCHANGE ACTIVITIES



Each unit has an extension activity at the back of the book known as an Interchange Activity. The Interchange Activity allows students to practice everything they have learned in the unit in the form of information gaps, surveys, and role plays. In an Interchange Activity, students ask their own information and include language they’ve learned in previous units as well.

There are seven general teaching steps for Interchange Activities:



Step 1. Set the scene

Step 2. Assign roles and explain the task

Step 3. Review the information on the page with students

Step 4. Model the task

Step 5. Students complete the task


WRITING

The Writing activities extend and reinforce the topic and grammar of the unit or cycle. These exercises also develop students’ composition skills. Students write postcards and invitations; they write descriptions and opinions; and they write about their own experiences.

There are five general teaching steps for Writing:



Step 1. Review or elicit key language and vocabulary

Step 2. Explain the task and go over the model

Step 3. Students make notes and then write rough drafts

Step 4. Students exchange compositions to get feedback

Step 5. Students edit their compositions and prepare final drafts




READING

The Reading activities help students develop a number of reading skills such as skimming and scanning. In Reading exercises, different types of texts are accompanied by pre-reading questions and a variety of post-reading tasks.
: There are five general teaching steps for Reading

Step 1. Introduce the topic and review key vocabulary

Step 2. Explain the task

Step 3. Students read silently and complete the task

Step 4. Students compare answers in pairs or groups

Step 5. Check answers with the class

GOOD LUCK]


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